Allergan plc, a leading global pharmaceutical company, announced the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved the company's supplemental New Drug Application (sNDA) for Teflaro (ceftaroline fosamil), granting new indications for paediatric patients 2 months of age to less than 18 years of age with acute bacterial skin and skin structure infections (ABSSSI), including infections caused by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), and community-acquired bacterial pneumonia (CABP) caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae and other designated susceptible bacteria.
"The impact of ABSSSI and CABP among children is significant, as these infections often require hospitalization and are met with limited pediatric treatment options, particularly as resistance increases among the pathogens that cause these infections," said David Nicholson, chief R&D officer, Allergan. "These new indications are yet another testament to our ongoing research and development in anti-infectives to address the evolving challenges of serious infections. Importantly, it allows us to educate physicians on the data they need to prescribe Teflaro to appropriate pediatric patients in need of an option that is safe and effective against some of the most difficult-to-treat pathogens in ABSSSI and CABP."
ABSSSI and CABP are common causes of healthcare visits and hospitalizations among children. Studies show more than 70,000 hospitalizations for ABSSSI occur among children per year - a rate that has more than doubled over the past 13 years. A study conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) also found children younger than 5 years of age accounted for 70 per cent of children hospitalized for community-acquired pneumonia.
These new indications were approved based on results from clinical studies evaluating Teflaro in paediatric patients (2 months to less than 18 years of age), including one active-controlled study in ABSSSI and two active-controlled studies in CABP. In the ABSSSI active-controlled study, the efficacy and safety of Teflaro was compared with vancomycin or cefazolin (each with optional aztreonam). In the CABP studies, Teflaro was compared with ceftriaxone. Use of Teflaro in paediatric patients 2 months to less than 18 years of age is supported by evidence from adequate and well-controlled studies of Teflaro in adults, as well as additional pharmacokinetic and safety data from paediatric trials.
The primary objective of the paediatric ABSSSI and CABP studies was to evaluate the safety and tolerability of Teflaro. These studies were not powered for comparative inferential efficacy analysis, and no efficacy endpoints were identified as primary.
To evaluate the treatment effect of Teflaro in the ABSSSI paediatric trial, an analysis was conducted in 159 patients with ABSSSI in the Modified Intent-to-Treat (MITT) population. This analysis evaluated responder rates based on achieving both cessation of lesion spread and absence of fever on study day 3. Patients treated with Teflaro showed a higher response at study day 3 versus the comparator group, with clinical response achieved in 80.4 percent (86/107) of patients treated with Teflaro and 75 percent (39/52) of patients in the comparator group, with a treatment difference of 5.4 percent (95 percent Confidence Interval [CI] -7.8, 20.3). Clinical cure rates at the test of cure (TOC) visit (8 to 15 days after the end of therapy) for the ABSSSI paediatric trial were 94.4 percent (101/107) for patients treated with Teflaro and 86.5 percent (45/52) for the comparator, with a treatment difference of 7.9 (95 percent CI -1.2, 20.2).
To evaluate the treatment effect of Teflaro in the CABP trial submitted for this paediatric filing, an analysis was conducted in 143 patients with CABP in the MITT population. This analysis evaluated responder rates at study day 4 based on achieving improvement in at least two out of seven symptoms (cough, dyspnea, chest pain, sputum production, chills, feeling of warmth/feverish and exercise intolerance or lethargy), and worsening in none of these symptoms. The clinical response at Study Day 4 was 69.2 percent (74/107) for patients treated with TEFLARO and 66.7 percent (24/36) for the comparator, with a treatment difference of 2.5 percent (95 percent CI -13.9, 20.9). Clinical cure rates at TOC were 87.9 percent (94/107) for patients treated with TEFLARO and 88.9 percent (32/36) for the comparator, with a treatment difference of -1.0 (95 percent CI -11.5, 14.1).
Results from the clinical studies in paediatric patients showed that Teflaro demonstrated a safety profile that was compatible with treatment of ABSSSI and CABP at the clinical dosages studied. The safety findings were similar to those seen in the adult studies, and no safety concerns were identified beyond those already known to be cephalosporin class effects.
Teflaro is the first and only cephalosporin indicated in adults and paediatric patients 2 months of age and older for the treatment of ABSSSI and CABP due to designated susceptible pathogens that can be administered by intravenous (IV) infusion in five minutes to one hour.
Teflaro was first approved by the US FDA in October 2010 for the treatment of adults with CABP and ABSSSI due to designated susceptible pathogens. Teflaro is a bactericidal cephalosporin with activity against both Gram-positive and Gram-negative pathogens. Teflaro is indicated in adult and paediatric patients 2 months of age and older for the treatment of CABP, including cases caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae, and ABSSSI, including cases caused by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). Teflaro is the first and only cephalosporin with activity against MRSA in ABSSSI. In clinical trials, Teflaro was generally well-tolerated with an adverse event profile consistent with the cephalosporin class of antibiotics. Teflaro has been administered in over 2.3 million days of therapy, treating more than 350,000 patients.
Allergan plc (formerly Forest Laboratories) obtained the worldwide rights (excluding Japan, where Takeda Pharmaceuticals holds rights) to Teflaro in 2007 when it acquired Cerexa, Inc., a privately held biopharmaceutical company. In August 2009, Forest Laboratories and AstraZeneca entered into a definitive collaboration agreement to co-develop and commercialize ceftaroline fosamil in all markets outside the US, Canada and Japan.
The most common adverse reactions occurring in >2% of patients receiving Teflaro in the adult pooled phase 3 clinical trials were diarrhoea (5%) nausea (4%), and rash (3%).
In 2014, there were 2.7 million hospital admissions for ABSSSI, of which 11 percent were for paediatric patients, which included patients with cellulitis, erysipelas, wound infection and major cutaneous abscess. The majority of all skin and soft tissue infections in hospitalized patients are caused by streptococci and Staphylococcus aureus, and approximately 59 percent of these Staphylococcus aureus infections in the U.S. are estimated to be caused by MRSA. Early and effective treatment of ABSSSI is critical to optimize patient recovery and for certain patients may also help to avoid potentially lengthy and costly hospital stays.
In 2014, there were 1.3 million hospital admissions for CABP, of which 8 percent were for paediatric patients. While the overall incidence of pneumonia is declining, it is still a leading cause of mortality accounting for more than 50,000 deaths in 2013. The economic burden of community-acquired pneumonia in the US is significant, due to high hospitalization and mortality rates associated with community-acquired pneumonia. More than $17 billion is spent on caring for patients with community-acquired pneumonia annually. Community-acquired pneumonia hospitalization costs for children alone amounted to $1 billion in 2009.